Jihadi preacher verdict a win against hate and racism

Jihadi preacher verdict a win against hate and racism

Commentary from co-CEO Peter Wertheim originally published in The Daily Telegraph on 1 July 2025.

In November 2023, William Haddad delivered a series of speeches to his followers which were video-recorded and uploaded to various online platforms.

The speeches included gen­er­al­ised state­ments about the Jewish people which, on any reas­on­able view, were grossly antisemitic.

This occurred at a time when the Hamas atrocity-crimes in Israel on October 7, 2023 had per­versely triggered an unpre­ced­en­ted upsurge in global antisemitism, including in Australia.

When it became evident that the respons­ible author­it­ies in Australia could not or would not act to protect vul­ner­able members of our community from hate-mongering, threats and violence, we decided that we had no altern­at­ive but to take action ourselves so as to defend the safety and honour of our community.

That decision has been vin­dic­ated by the judgment that was handed down by the federal court Tuesday.

It confirms that the days when Jewish com­munit­ies and the Jewish people can be vilified and targeted, with impunity, are a thing of the past.

This case was not about freedom of expres­sion or religious freedom.

It was about antisemitism and the abuse of those freedoms in order to promote antisemitism.

People are free to engage in robust debate about inter­na­tion­al conflicts, whether their beliefs are true or false, informed or ignorant.

But that does not include the freedom to mobilise racism as a polemical tool to promote one’s views – to dehu­man­ise and vilify entire com­munit­ies or indi­vidu­als on the basis of their racial, ethnic or ethno-religious identity.

If the 300 ancestry groups and 100 faith com­munit­ies living in Australia today were all free to vilify one another in the way that Mr Haddad vilified the Jewish people, the door would be wide open to chronic racial and sectarian strife of the kind that has dev­ast­ated other countries, and the peace and harmony we have generally enjoyed in Australia would be ruined for everyone.

Common decency should dictate that free speech and freedom of religion do not include the right to racially vilify other people.

Common decency should tell us that that is where to draw the line. But when common decency is lacking, as we have seen far too often over the last 21 months, then the law will draw that line for us, as today’s judgment has demon­strated with crystal clarity.

Commentary by co-CEO Peter Wertheim, originally published in the Australian Financial Review on 7 April 2026.

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